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    Restaurant in Llafranc, Spain

    Casamar

    340Pearl Points

    Costa Brava views, serious Mediterranean cooking.

    Casamar, Restaurant in Llafranc

    About Casamar

    Casamar is the strongest case for a considered Mediterranean meal in Llafranc: a Michelin-recognised kitchen inside a family-run hotel with over seventy years of operation, hillside views over the bay, and a flexible format spanning à la carte and two tasting menus. At €€€, it sits well below the €€€€ tier of Spain's headline restaurants while holding a 4.7 Google rating. Book dinner for occasions; lunch à la carte for value.

    Who Should Book Casamar

    Casamar is the right call for couples or small groups who want a considered Mediterranean meal on the Costa Brava without committing to the full theatre of Spain's €€€€ tasting-menu circuit. The setting, within a family-run hotel that has been operating for over seven decades and is now in its second generation, gives the dining room a settled confidence that purely restaurant-focused venues rarely match. If you are visiting Llafranc for the first time and want one meal that captures what this stretch of the Catalan coast actually tastes like, this is where to go. It is also a sensible choice for a special occasion where the priority is quality and atmosphere rather than provocation.

    What to Expect at Casamar

    The restaurant sits inside Hotel Casamar on a hillside position above Llafranc's bay, which means the views from the dining room extend across the beach and the coastline beyond. For a first visit, arrive early enough to take in that setting before the room fills. The kitchen under chef Quim Casellas works across a clear range of formats: an à la carte with a dedicated rice section, and two set menus named Punta d'en Blanc and Degustación. The à la carte gives you the most flexibility, and it is the format to choose at lunch when you may want a lighter commitment. The Degustación menu is the move at dinner when you want the kitchen to sequence the meal for you.

    The cooking sits at the intersection of traditional Catalan and Mediterranean technique, with Casellas incorporating produce and flavour references from the immediate local area. The menu has included dishes such as white asparagus with hollandaise, aged pork rib, and puffed rice with caviar. These read as accessible reference points rather than test-kitchen challenges, which is important context for first-timers: this is not a conceptually demanding meal. It is precise, regionally grounded cooking that makes sense for where you are. The Michelin Plate recognition in both 2024 and 2025 confirms consistent quality at this level without overstating the ambition. The Opinionated About Dining ranking at #472 in Europe for 2025 places Casamar in a competitive band of restaurants that serious diners track.

    Lunch vs Dinner: Where the Value Shifts

    For a first-time visitor, the lunch versus dinner question at Casamar is worth thinking through carefully because the two experiences serve different purposes. Lunch here has a practical advantage: you get the kitchen at full capacity during daylight, the views of the bay are at their most readable, and the à la carte format means you can eat for less than a full set-menu commitment. If budget is a consideration within the €€€ price range, lunch à la carte is the more flexible entry point. A focused lunch of two courses plus the rice section is a strong introduction to what Casellas does without locking you into the full sequence.

    Dinner at Casamar is where the occasion logic kicks in. The Degustación menu is built for an evening pace, and the hillside setting reads differently after dark with the lights of the bay below. For a birthday, anniversary, or any meal where the event itself matters, book dinner and take the longer menu. The pricing across both menus sits at €€€, which is meaningful in the context of a Costa Brava summer trip where coastal restaurant pricing can escalate quickly. Casamar's position as a hotel restaurant with a loyal returning clientele also means service tends to be measured and attentive rather than rushed, which supports the evening format well. The 4.7 Google rating across 889 reviews suggests this consistency holds across seasons.

    Practical Notes for First-Timers

    Llafranc is a small coastal village in the Baix Empordà region of Girona, well positioned for travellers already exploring the Costa Brava. For context on other places to eat and stay in the area, see our full Llafranc restaurants guide, our full Llafranc hotels guide, and our full Llafranc bars guide. If you are planning a broader itinerary, our Llafranc wineries guide and experiences guide are also worth checking.

    The booking difficulty at Casamar is classified as easy relative to the broader Spanish fine dining market. That said, Llafranc is a summer destination and the hotel's dining room has a limited number of covers. Book at least two to three weeks ahead if visiting in July or August. Off-season visits in May, June, or September carry less urgency but confirm in advance regardless. Contact via the hotel directly since no online booking system is listed in current data.

    Dress is smart-casual for the €€€ price point in this setting. The room is not formal, but a beachside resort aesthetic does not mean anything goes at dinner. For special-occasion meals on the Degustación menu, err toward smart rather than casual.

    For comparison context across Spain's broader fine dining circuit, El Celler de Can Roca in Girona is the region's three-Michelin-star benchmark and sits in a different category entirely. Quique Dacosta in Dénia and Ricard Camarena in València offer useful reference points for what Mediterranean-focused cooking looks like at the next tier. Martin Berasategui, Mugaritz, and Atrio in Cáceres extend the wider Spanish fine dining picture if you are building a longer trip. For global modern cuisine comparisons, Frantzén in Stockholm and FZN by Björn Frantzén in Dubai show how the format translates across markets.

    • Price range: €€€
    • Awards: Michelin Plate 2024 & 2025; Opinionated About Dining Europe #472 (2025)
    • Google rating: 4.7 (889 reviews)
    • Cuisine: Modern Mediterranean / Traditional Catalan
    • Format: À la carte + two set menus (Punta d'en Blanc and Degustación)
    • Setting: Hotel restaurant, hillside above Llafranc bay
    • Booking difficulty: Easy (book 2–3 weeks ahead in summer)

    Frequently Asked Questions

    Does Casamar handle dietary restrictions?

    The kitchen's Mediterranean and traditional Spanish focus means fish, shellfish, and meat feature heavily across both the à la carte and the two set menus (Punta d'en Blanc and Degustación). check the venue's official channels before booking if you have specific dietary needs — at €€€ pricing, a quick call ahead is worth the effort to avoid surprises on the night.

    How far ahead should I book Casamar?

    Book at least two to three weeks out if you're visiting in peak Costa Brava season (July and August), when Llafranc fills up and the hotel dining room draws both guests and outside visitors. Shoulder season — May, June, or September — gives you more flexibility, though Casamar's Michelin Plate recognition and OAD ranking (#472 in Europe, 2025) mean it's not a walk-in venue on busy weekends.

    What should I wear to Casamar?

    The setting is a family-run hotel restaurant above a small coastal bay, which points toward neat, relaxed clothing rather than formal attire. Think resort-smart: pressed trousers or a summer dress works; a jacket is unlikely to be required but wouldn't look out of place given the €€€ price point.

    Is Casamar good for a special occasion?

    Yes, particularly for couples or small groups who want something more considered than a beachfront bistro without the formality of a full tasting-menu operation. The hillside setting above Llafranc bay, the Degustación menu option, and the Michelin Plate status all support a celebratory booking — it reads as a destination rather than just a convenient dinner.

    Is Casamar worth the price?

    At €€€, Casamar sits in a reasonable range for Michelin-recognised cooking on the Costa Brava, where comparable quality is scarce in a small coastal village. Chef Quim Casellas's focus on local Mediterranean ingredients with technical touches — the à la carte includes rice dishes, white asparagus, aged pork rib, and a puffed rice and caviar option — gives the menu genuine range. If you're already in the Llafranc or Girona area, the value case is solid; travelling specifically for it requires more commitment than the recognition level currently justifies.

    Location

    Carrer del Nero, 3, 17211 Llafranc, Girona, Spain

    Llafranc, Spain

    Compare Casamar

    Price vs. Value: Casamar
    VenuePriceBooking Difficulty
    Casamar€€€Easy
    Aponiente€€€€Unknown
    Arzak€€€€Unknown
    Azurmendi€€€€Unknown
    Cocina Hermanos Torres€€€€Unknown
    DiverXO€€€€Unknown

    Side-by-side comparison to help you decide where to book.

    Also Consider

    How Casamar Compares

    Casamar operates at €€€ while its most obvious Spanish peers, Aponiente, Arzak, Azurmendi, Cocina Hermanos Torres, and DiverXO, all sit at €€€€ with tasting-menu-only formats. That price tier difference is the first decision point. If your trip is structured around a single landmark meal at a three-star or top-50 level, Casamar is not that venue. But if you want quality regional cooking in an outstanding coastal setting without the full financial and logistical commitment of Spain's most demanding restaurants, Casamar is the more practical and arguably better-value choice.

    On booking difficulty, the contrast is stark. DiverXO in Madrid requires months of advance planning and is among the hardest reservations in Spain. Aponiente in El Puerto de Santa María is similarly constrained. Casamar books easily by comparison, and its à la carte option means you are not locked into a single format or price point the way you are at tasting-menu-only venues. For flexible travellers or those planning trips on shorter timelines, that accessibility is a genuine advantage.

    The clearest peer comparison for a first-timer deciding between Casamar and the broader Spanish circuit is this: if you are already routing through Girona or the Costa Brava, Casamar earns its place as the local high-quality option and does not require you to organise your trip around it. If you are specifically building an itinerary around one or two benchmark Spanish meals, redirect your budget to Arzak or Azurmendi for the Basque Country, or El Celler de Can Roca if Girona is already on the route. Casamar and Can Roca are not substitutes for each other, they sit in different quality tiers, but both reward a Catalan itinerary in distinct ways.

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